Biography
					Virginia Davis was born on December 31, 1918, in Kansas City, Missouri.  Her father was a traveling furniture salesman and spent much time away  from home. With her husband gone for weeks at a time, Margaret Davis,  a housewife, focused all her attention on her daughter; she began  taking Virginia to dancing lessons and modeling auditions when she was  2. A striking child with long curls, Virginia was soon appearing in  advertisements that played between films in local theaters. She also  entered Georgie Brown's Dramatic School in Kansas City, where she  studied drama and dance. In the summer of 1923, 22-year-old Walt Disney,  a struggling but ambitious director, saw Virginia in an advertisement  in a Kansas City theater and immediately decided to hire her. He quickly  contacted Margaret Davis, who was eager to advance her Virginia's  career. Alice's Wonderland  (1923), the first short film of the Alice series, was filmed at the  Davis home in Kansas City; both Margaret Davis and Walt Disney made  brief appearances (which marked Disney's first live appearance in one of  his own cartoons). After filming, Disney returned to Hollywood and  began to build his movie empire with only forty dollars and one short  film starring little Virginia Davis. The Davis family soon followed  Disney to Hollywood, although their daughter's career was not the only  reason for the move; Virginia had suffered a pneumonia and other health  problems, and her doctor told her parents that she would be healthier in  a drier, warmer climate. Virginia signed her first contract with Disney  for a salary of $100 a month, and she began filming the Alice shorts in  Walt Disney's first studio, his uncle's garage. His brother Roy O. Disney  was the cameraman, and the Disney family dog Peggy appeared in many of  the films. The Alice shorts became very popular, providing Disney with  his first national success. But as the series progressed, Disney became  more interested in the animation aspect, which minimized Virginia's  live-action role; she only made about thirteen of the Alice shorts  before her contract was severed. She later auditioned for the role of  voice of Snow White in Disney's film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs  (1937), but she didn't get the role because her mother refused to  accept the frugal salary. Virginia had some small roles in full-length  films, including The Harvey Girls  (1946), before she left acting to earn a degree from the New York  School of Interior Design. She later became an editor for the 1950s  magazine "Living for Young Homemakers," and in the 1960s, she began  working for real estate agents in Connecticut and later California. In  1992, interest was renewed in the Alice series. Living in retirement in  Montana, Virginia was suddenly overwhelmed by the number of fans seeking  to honor her and the remarkable role she played in the birth of Walt  Disney Studios. She was the guest of honor at the Pordonone Silent Film  Festival in Italy in 1992, and she was inducted as a Disney Legend in  1998. Virginia also became very active in silent film festivals and  events at Disneyland and Walt Disney World.
															Birthday: 1918-12-31